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Winds of War: 2003-12-22
by Joe Katzman at December 22, 2003 5:38 AM
Our regular feature is on hiatus right now, and will resume on its usual Mondays & Thursdays in the New Year. This post isn't a full report, just a quick round-up from vacationland of some interesting things people are sending me. The weather here sucks... might as well blog.
IRAQ
The Art of Peace writes: Could Lt. Col. Alan King help turn Iraq around and make Iraq a pillar of freedom for the middle east despite everything? I've noted the importance of tribes in Iraqi society before. King is an Army civil affairs commander who has made it his personal mission to understand Iraq's labyrinthine tribal system, and has some solid results to show for it. Great piece, and great work!
UPDATE: P. has a mini-roundup of his own, including a very good Ralph Peters article tracing the successes to date as a result of Saddam's capture, and explaining why it is a big deal. I also enjoyed P's link to the report of Iraq's new U.N. representative upbraiding that fraud Kofi Annan and his ilk. Give 'em hell, Ambassador!
Trent also points to a story that the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq is planning to transmit news footage from Iraq directly via satellite, for use by local media outlets in Western countries. Not a bad idea - but personally, I wish they'd do a better job of setting up media options inside Iraq.
David Kaspar notes that the Iraqi national soccer team is whining about not having a field to practice on. Given the importance of soccer in the Middle East, finding them a field and some facilities might be a good idea for the CPA - or an outstanding sponsorship opportunity for a sharp corporation.
The Winds of Change.NET consolidated directory of ways you can support the troops. American, Australian, British, Canadian, Polish. [updated Dec. 1, 2003]
There's a new commander in Afghanistan, with a new approach to take the conflict into its next phases. Welcome to Fort Apache, Afghanistan. Along the way, Trent delivers some sharp kicks to international NGOs.
Armed Liberal also emails me this excerpt from Kuwait's Al-Siyassah, whose editorial urged Gulf leaders to embrace political reform: "The winds of change are sweeping the area at this time, and demands for political, cultural, democratic and economic change are bearing down on us strongly..." Hey, we get results!
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